IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing (Jan 2024)

Microwave Radiometer Calibration Using Deep Learning With Reduced Reference Information and 2-D Spectral Features

  • Ahmed Manavi Alam,
  • Mehmet Kurum,
  • Mehmet Ogut,
  • Ali C. Gurbuz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JSTARS.2023.3333268
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17
pp. 748 – 765

Abstract

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The accuracy of geophysical retrievals from radiometers relies on calibration quality, encompassing both absolute radiometric accuracy and spectral consistency. Radiometers have employed various calibration techniques, including external targets, vicarious sources, and internal calibrators like noise diodes or matched reference loads. Calibration techniques face challenges like frequency dependence, instrumental effects, environmental influences, drift, aging, and radio frequency interference. Recent hardware advancements enable radiometers to collect raw samples containing both temporal and spectral information. Leveraging advanced modeling techniques like deep learning (DL) enables detecting subtle correlations, non-linear dependencies, and higher-order interactions within the data extracting valuable information that may have been challenging with conventional methods. This study utilizes NASA's Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite's level 1A and level 1B data products to develop a DL-based radiometer calibrator to estimate antenna temperature. Spectrograms of second raw moments equivalent to power carrying the 2-D spectral features serve as primary input in a supervised convolutional neural network-based architecture. DL-based calibrator has demonstrated high correlation and low root mean square error when incorporating spectral information from both reference and noise diodes and when not considering this information. Findings suggest that the ancillary features such as internal thermistor temperature and loss elements exhibit sufficient accuracy in estimating antenna temperature to compensate for variations in receiver noise temperature and short-term gain fluctuations in the absence of the reference load and noise diode power. The proposed calibration technique with reduced reference information might enable radiometers for a higher number of antenna scene observations within a footprint.

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